The Bears made the rumored signing of cornerback Prince Amukamara official on Saturday morning.

In addition, the Bears also announced they have re-signed linebacker Christian Jones and cornerback Johnthan Banks to one-year deals.

Amukamara, 27, appeared in 14 games with the Jacksonville Jaguars after signing a one-year deal with the club last offseason. He registered 46 tackles, no interceptions and 6 passes defended. Amukamara, a former first round pick by the New York Giants out of Nebraska in 2011, has appeared in 69 games across 6 seasons and has accumulated 310 tackles, seven interceptions and 51 passes defended.

Amukamara's one-year deal with the Bears will pay him a fully-guaranteed $7 million, per USA Today.

Jones, 26, was signed by the Bears as undrafted free agent out of Florida State in 2014.

In three seasons with the Bears, Jones has registered 204 tackles and two sacks. Jones has also added 26 special teams tackles. One of the Bears' key special teams contributors, Jones matched a career-high with 11 tackles last season.

Banks, 27, was claimed off waivers by the Bears from the Detroit Lions last December.

Banks, originally a second-round selection out of Mississippi State by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2013, has appeared in 54 NFL games and has 136 tackles, seven interceptions and 17 passes defended.

Under Center Podcast: What did win over Bengals mean for John Fox and Ryan Pace?

Under Center Podcast: What did win over Bengals mean for John Fox and Ryan Pace?

JJ Stankevitz and John “Moon” Mullin debate what the Bears’ blowout win in Cincinnati meant for John Fox and Ryan Pace. Plus, how can Mitchell Trubisky and Adam Shaheen grow from how well they played on Sunday?

What was it like to coach against Devin Hester? 'You hold your breath'

What was it like to coach against Devin Hester? 'You hold your breath'

Jeff Rodgers had to gameplan for Devin Hester twice in his career as a special teams coordinator under John Fox: First, in 2010 with the Carolina Panthers, and second, in 2011 with the Denver Broncos.

“You're holding your breath,” Rodgers, who’s in his third year as the Bears’ special teams coordinator, said. “There's been nobody like him in my generation.”

Neither of those games were necessarily the most memorable performances by Hester, who set an NFL record with 19 special teams touchdowns (14 on punt returns, five on kickoff returns). But the fact that Rodgers — like every other special teams coordinator from 2006-2016 — had to gameplan for Hester was notable in and of itself.

“He was really the first guy that you really game-planned for and you saw different people take different approaches,” Rodgers said. “You see people try to punt the ball out of bounds. Well, defenses can combat that with some of the rush scheme so you may have to change that. Saw people try to kick fair catch balls and short because the reality is, if you played Chicago when he was rolling and you came out of the game with a 35 or 36 punt, which isn't great, but against him, you're usually taking that every time. He's as good as it gets.”

In that first meeting, on Oct. 10, 2010 in Charlotte, Rodgers’ strategy was to punt out of bounds or away from Hester to prevent him from fielding anything.

At first, it didn’t work: Hester ripped off a 50-yard return on the first punt he fielded.

“We tried to punt the ball out of bounds and our punter put the ball about four inches from the sideline,” Rodgers said. “He reached in and got it and shot straight up the sideline.”

From there, punter Jason Baker largely succeeded in kicking away from Hester, with his next six punts not being fielded or being fair caught. But the downside to that strategy was the Bears frequently received good starting field position — though having drives begin between the 40s was preferable to Hester ripping off a big return to set up a drive beginning in the Panthers’ red zone.

A year later, Rodgers again had to figure out how to mute Hester’s success with the Denver Broncos. He was more successful in this Dec. 11, 2011 meeting, with Hester returning one kickoff for 25 yards and gaining 36 yards on two punt returns. Hester fair caught four punts, and one went out of bounds.

But Hester still notched returns of 26 and 10 yards despite Denver’s strategy to kick the ball as high as possible.

“In Denver, we tried to hang it up there,” Rodgers said. “Did a good job on the first couple. Actually the best ball that our punter hit that day, that was the 2011 game, the best ball our punter hit that day with hang time and distance, he kind of circled around, went backwards, sideline, all of a sudden he turned a corner and you're holding your breath. We were able to get him on the ground, but he's a game-changer.”

The game-changing success Hester found as a return specialist should get him into the Pro Football Hall of Fame someday, unless the rather strange stinginess on special teamers in Canton continues. But there’s no doubt in Rodgers’ mind when it comes to how great Hester was — and how maddening it was to scheme against him.

“I'd say (he) changed the game on both kickoffs and punts,” Rodgers said. “He's the best that's ever done it.”